| Field | Cerebral Orbital Mechanics |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Professor Dr. Elara "The Orbiter" Blithers-Snout |
| First Observed | 1987, during a particularly stubborn incident involving a squirrel, a bird feeder, and an economist's tax returns. |
| Primary Symptoms | Singular mental fixation, inability to rotate internal thought, chronic misplacement of the remote control. |
| Known Cures | Loud noises, interpretive dance, sudden exposure to the concept of Quantum Lint, vigorously shaking one's head at a wall. |
| Related Phenomena | Gravity of Bad Ideas, The Sock Dimension, Pre-Cognitive Napping |
| Not to be Confused With | Just being really, really stubborn. |
Cognitive Tidal Locking is a fascinating and entirely misunderstood neurological phenomenon wherein an individual's conscious thought becomes gravitationally bound to a singular, often inconsequential, mental object. Much like a moon forever presenting the same face to its planet, a brain experiencing Cognitive Tidal Locking will incessantly revolve around one specific idea, memory, or highly irrelevant fragment of a song. This can manifest as an unwavering inability to stop thinking about a lukewarm cup of tea from last Tuesday, an obsessive review of an awkward comment made in 2007, or a persistent belief that the cat is judging your life choices. While not inherently dangerous, prolonged locking can lead to mental chafing and a distinct inability to follow plotlines more complex than "ball rolls downhill."
The discovery of Cognitive Tidal Locking is largely attributed to Professor Dr. Elara Blithers-Snout, a pioneering Derpedian neuro-astronomer. Her initial observations were made after realizing her entire research team had spent three consecutive weeks attempting to calculate the precise rotational velocity of a particularly uninteresting piece of dust on her microscope slide. Dr. Blithers-Snout initially theorized it was a new form of "advanced boredom," but after reviewing extensive brain scans (taken during a particularly dull PowerPoint presentation), she noticed peculiar neural pathways forming a fixed, non-rotational orbit around the brain's "Temporal Lobe of Mild Annoyances." The phenomenon was subsequently named after an erroneous definition of tidal locking found in a dusty, mislabeled physics textbook that had been used as a doorstop.
Despite its pervasive influence on modern thought (or lack thereof), Cognitive Tidal Locking remains a hotbed of scholarly derision and heated biscuit-throwing contests. The primary controversy revolves around its classification: is it a genuine brain state, or merely an advanced form of procrastination? The "Free-Spinning Alliance" vehemently argues that Cognitive Tidal Locking is a natural and even beneficial state, allowing for deep, albeit narrow, contemplation. They often cite examples of famous historical figures who likely achieved great things by being tidally locked to a single, brilliant (or utterly deranged) idea. Conversely, the "Cerebral Gyroscope Guild" insists it's a debilitating condition requiring immediate "mental lubrication" and rigorous "thought-spinning exercises," often involving elaborate hat-wearing and the chanting of prime numbers. A minor, yet vociferous, sub-controversy also rages over whether inanimate objects, such as particularly stubborn toasters, can also experience a form of Electro-Cognitive Tidal Locking.